How about we all send letters or emails to the executives of the publishing houses to let them know how we feel about their plan to delay ebooks by four months? Maybe if we all sound off on them they will realize they are alienating the very readers they want money from?

How about we all send letters or emails to the executives of the publishing houses to let them know how we feel about their plan to delay ebooks by four months? Maybe if we all sound off on them they will realize they are alienating the very readers they want money from?

I'll see if I can find addresses and emails for them. Anyone in?

I have one. A picture. A picture of a middle finger raised high. Underneath this are words that are not meant for children, but which children use in any case.

But a well crafted letter to more than just Carolyn Reidy might turns heads more. That may be how we feel, but it won't get the reaction we wish.

As the late Patrick Swayze said in "Road House", "Be nice. Be nice until it's time to not be nice." They just blow off the really rude letters and emails.

It's an insulated business, we already know this. A business that has, in no uncertain terms, made a stand with the latest move. That stand was to say "Go Away. We don't want your custom." Fine. They, and the cowardly writers who acquiesce to the whole rotting system can go hang. I can read great free literature both new and old for the rest of my life and I don't have to pay one single cent (I will pay if the writer is independent). My reader is crammed full of great mysteries and pulp from Munsey's, classics from Feedbooks, Manybooks and Gutenberg, and new writers that are infinitely more interesting than what is currently being published by the big boys.

The only thing they care about are bottom lines. We're below bottom. Our letters might as well be stamped with 'immediate shredding."

So you would rather curse the darkness than to light a candle, just because you think it will not give off enough light?

I suppose you do not vote either, because your vote doesn't matter.

We need to let them know ahead of time why their profits will go down, so that when it does they have something to correlate it to, instead of putting their, ahem, heads together and coming up with something stupid that has no basis in truth.

I sent St. Martin's an email about a book that was priced higher than the paper version, but I just sent it to customer service. I plan to email each publisher every time they have a lost sale from me for some ridiculous reason.

I've sent emails to both publishers and authors, and told them I'd be boycotting their business until they change their minds. I suspect they could really care less, they are fighting a bigger battle and we are just the collateral damage, so to speak.

I'm not positive about the email, but it is in the same format as others in the company, so I plan on trying it. Then there are the other executives. I saw both names capitalized in the email, and both lowercase, so if one doesn't work we might try the other.